Outward facing media [Was: Goodies for GNOME 3.0 launch parties]
- From: Allan Day <allanpday gmail com>
- To: Stormy Peters <stormy gnome org>
- Cc: GNOME Marketing List <marketing-list gnome org>
- Subject: Outward facing media [Was: Goodies for GNOME 3.0 launch parties]
- Date: Sat, 29 Jan 2011 14:12:29 +0000
Stormy Peters wrote:
> > In fact I am also interested in a more generic question
> which is how do
> > we usually use our channels to announce stuff? I tried to
> motivate
> > people with the T-shirt contest but didn't receive much
> feedback except
> > from the people I contacted personally. How do we actually
> usually
> > promote stuff outside of the GNOME community? (I thought
> GUGs would be a
> > good way, but they seem a little bit sleepy ;) ).
>
>
> Good question! I've been thinking for a while that GNOME needs
> an
> outward facing media channel. The Planet and GNOME News are
> primarily
> places where we talk to ourselves. www.gnome.org is outward
> facing and
> has a news section, but it isn't primarily a news site (you
> certainly
> can't subscribe to it)... A blog or news site where we talk to
> our
> partners and to GNOME enthusiasts would be a great way to
> promote GNOME
> and to keep people in tune with where the project is going.
> It'd need
> volunteers if it were to become an enduring reality, of
> course...
>
> There are people that have been helping with Facebook and Twitter.
>
> I think a blog would be hard but perhaps a blog that gives excerpts
> and points to other articles. That way someone could follow Planet
> GNOME, GNOME News and other channels, make a judgement call on what
> would be interesting to our users and add them to the feed.
I fully agree. We don't have the capacity to produce original content.
Linking to existing material is a good way to go for the time being [1].
One way we can do this is through our microblogging channels. I've been
doing a bit of work to develop these in recent times... if we want to
take this further, there are a couple of things we can do:
First, get more people involved. Right now, our bus-factor [2] is
extremely high. If microblogging is going to be a proper part of our
communications strategy, it needs to be stable and reliable. Any
volunteers?!
Second, we could tie our microblogging feeds into other channels, both
as a way to get more people following them and as a means to get that
content to people who don't use a microblogging service. Displaying our
feeds on our web-sites is one obvious possibility here. I'm sure there
are others though.
Best,
Allan
[1] The difficulty with this is that much of the content that we
currently generate is written for people who already know GNOME. The
reason for a channel of the kind that I described in my previous mail is
to explain how GNOME works to external audiences.
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_factor
--
Blog: http://afaikblog.wordpress.com/
IRC: aday on irc.gnome.org
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